Association of Gospel Rescue Missions
Established | 1913 |
---|---|
Type | Association |
Affiliations | Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability |
Website |
www |
The Association of Gospel Rescue Missions (AGRM)–formerly known as the International Union of Gospel Missions–is a nonprofit organization founded in 1913. AGRM's member missions work to provide emergency shelter, permanent housing, food, youth and family services, and education and job training programs. In addition, AGRM member organizations operate rehabilitation programs for drug addicts and alcoholics, and assistance to the elderly poor and at-risk youth. If annual cash contributions to all member missions were combined, the Association would be among the ten largest nonprofit organizations in the United States. Each year, AGRM's network of some 300 rescue missions serve approximately 66 million meals, provide more than 20 million nights of shelter and housing, assist some 45,000 people in finding employment, provide clothing to more than 750,000 people, and graduate nearly 17,000 homeless men and women from addiction recovery programs into productive living.
Rescue missions have been providing hospitality to impoverished people in America since the 1870s. Rescue mission staff members are experts at providing effective care for men, women, and children who are hungry, homeless, abused, or addicted.
AGRM is North America’s oldest and largest network of crisis shelters and rehabilitation centers, offering radical hospitality in the name of Jesus. For more information, please visit www.agrm.org.
History
When Jerry McAuley founded his rescue mission in October 1872, he gave birth to an idea and a ministry that was to spread around the world. Out of this humble but virile beginning came a number of missions that, through their leaders, saw a need for an organization that would foster “fellowship, cooperation with all engaged or interested in gospel missions, and other rescue work throughout the United States and in other lands, in the mutual advancement of the cause of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
The International Union of Gospel Missions (later called AGRM) was organized on September 17, 1913, in New York City. Mr. Sidney Whittemore is credited as the father of the body. The State of New York granted the rescue ministry leaders a certificate of incorporation on October 14, 1913.
As the IUGM grew, it devised a system of convenience for closer and more concentrated work among its members by establishing local branches known as districts. Today there are nine districts, each of which has elected officers.[1]
What Gospel Rescue Missions are about
- Rescue — Pulling people to safety from adverse conditions, and from choices and habits that lead to damaged health and death
- Redemption — Presenting people with a gospel that is about life transformation in Jesus, and the reclamation of His creation
- Rehabilitation — Helping people break the bonds of addiction and desperate behavior, and experience a life of healing and wholeness
- Re-assimilation — Preparing people to dwell in community, and to have meaningful roles that lead to stability and missional living
Association responsibilities
As part of its mission, AGRM takes four major responsibilities: (1) Creating new rescue mission ministries; (2) promoting and emphasizing prayer and spiritual values and growth; (3) providing local ministries with education, training, consultation, conferences, conventions, and networking; and (4) stressing to the church and community the importance and value of their rescue efforts.
See also
- City Mission
- Kansas City Rescue Mission
- Lima Rescue Mission
- Long Beach Rescue Mission
- Milwaukee Rescue Mission
- Sunday Breakfast Rescue Mission of Philadelphia, PA.
- Union Gospel Mission
- Union Rescue Mission
References
- ↑ "IUGM Founding". Association of Gospel Rescue Missions. AGRM. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
External links
- Association of Gospel Rescue Missions
- City Vision College is the online college founded in 1998 by AGRM as "Rescue College." It moved to become a program of TechMission in 2008.